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General Tabletop Discussion
*Dungeons & Dragons
Players: Why Do You Want to Roll a d20?
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<blockquote data-quote="iserith" data-source="post: 7792334" data-attributes="member: 97077"><p>I mean, the prerequisite for there being a roll at all is that there is a meaningful consequence if you fail. Certainly that is something the character may wish to avoid even if the player might think failure in a specific instance could be fun and contribute to an exciting, memorable story. In general, it seems like a reasonable player behavior to want to succeed more often than fail and that's all this is really about: Asking to roll more dice is asking for a higher chance of meaningful consequences for failure. That does not strike me as a good strategy for long-term success.</p><p></p><p>If the DM is asking for rolls when there is no meaningful consequence for failure, well, that's not really what we're supposed to be doing according to the rules. And that's fine - people can play how they want. But as my original post lays out, I am taking this position based on a rules-based approach. If there really aren't any meaningful consequences to bear, then it makes sense players are asking to roll. There's hardly any downside.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="iserith, post: 7792334, member: 97077"] I mean, the prerequisite for there being a roll at all is that there is a meaningful consequence if you fail. Certainly that is something the character may wish to avoid even if the player might think failure in a specific instance could be fun and contribute to an exciting, memorable story. In general, it seems like a reasonable player behavior to want to succeed more often than fail and that's all this is really about: Asking to roll more dice is asking for a higher chance of meaningful consequences for failure. That does not strike me as a good strategy for long-term success. If the DM is asking for rolls when there is no meaningful consequence for failure, well, that's not really what we're supposed to be doing according to the rules. And that's fine - people can play how they want. But as my original post lays out, I am taking this position based on a rules-based approach. If there really aren't any meaningful consequences to bear, then it makes sense players are asking to roll. There's hardly any downside. [/QUOTE]
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Players: Why Do You Want to Roll a d20?
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